The weather here was pretty warm in April, and I wanted to get a head start on the garden. So I went ahead and planted some zucchini, watermelon, cucumber, and cantaloupe seeds in pots. They came up and were doing well, and the weather got cold. So they stayed on the porch, and got a bit leggy. But then the weather warmed, and I got the garden worked up, so I transplanted them and mulched them in good. There were a couple of nights it was going to get into the upper 30s, and I worried, but hoped that with the mulch they would be okay. But then I noticed half their leaves were brown. I kicked myself, and worried, but hoped for the best. Then, on our last frost date, we got frost. I debated on doing something to cover them, but I’m a night owl and don’t usually get up till noon, and they were half-dead anyway. So my seedlings died. My onions, peas, and lettuce pulled through without issue, and the couple potatoes that had come up are recovering. It did take a long time for my beans and corn to come up, but hopefully that was just because the ground wasn’t overly warm. The beans are finally coming up, and the corn is a bit hit or miss, but that might just be because it’s old seed.
My plan had been to
transplant in the seedlings, then wait some weeks before direct planting more
seeds, to spread the harvest out some.
So I left spaces for where these new plants would go. Now a week or so before the frost, we had
some old eggs that needed to be gotten rid of.
And I figured I’d bury them in the garden. I dug a trench about where some tomatoes will
go and buried most of them, but I also buried some where I was going to direct
sow the melons and such. We have about
six inches of soil, then a clay layer. I
dug down into the clay layer, dumped in the eggs, broke them, dumped some
compost on top, then covered them over.
And I put a marker to know where to plant.
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